Saturday Star

Rassie show will reveal if head honchos really care about rugby

- MARK KEOHANE mark.keohane@inl.co.za ESHLIN VEDAN

RASSIE Erasmus’ World Rugby hearing this weekend for allegedly bringing the game into disrepute won’t quite be the showdown that brings the sport’s "Old Boys Club" to its knees, but Erasmus’s refusal to play ball with elected officials will hopefully be the catalyst that finally brings match officials to account in profession­al rugby.

Erasmus took on the match officials after the Springboks lost the first Test 22-17 against the British & Irish Lions. Erasmus detailed 26 instances in which the Boks were prejudiced and in which the referee, the assistants and the Television Match Official got it wrong.

The video was sent to World Rugby’s head of referees, Joel Jutge, and to the referee in question, Nic Berry. The video, through a leak, also went viral.

It is World Rugby’s charge that Erasmus took the video public and ensured it went viral and in doing so brought the game into disrepute.

World Rugby has appointed an independen­t judiciary for the two-day hearing, which will be conducted via Zoom on Saturday and Sunday. It has taken World Rugby more than two months to get to this point and even before a word has been spoken in the hearing, the integrity of the hearing is already questionab­le.

The independen­t judiciary is not really independen­t as those appointed all consult to World Rugby. They are on the books of World Rugby. It raises questions as to how they can objectivel­y rule on Erasmus, who has been labelled the renegade and maverick of the game within the corridors at World Rugby.

The only way Erasmus can be found guilty is if the judiciary can prove, without any doubt, that he was the individual who intentiona­lly released the video into the public domain.

Erasmus’s defence is that he sent it to various people in an official capacity, and he will list who those people were, including Berry and Jutge, and that he never released it to the public himself.

This effectivel­y is what the weekend will be about, when it should really just be about incompeten­t match officiatin­g, the diabolical state of match officiatin­g, or serious questions being asked about the intent of match officials if they continue to get so much wrong.

What makes rugby union match officials any purer than match officials in every other sporting code, who, over time, have fallen foul to the dark arts of outside influence, match manipulati­on, spread betting and sports betting?

Why have rugby union’s match officials always been beyond reproach and beyond question, regardless of how much they get wrong?

Human error, as an excuse, is not good enough in a profession­al sporting environmen­t.

The match officials have chosen this as their paid career. Some excel and some should not be paid to do the job as their match officiatin­g isn’t of the necessary standard.

World Rugby isn’t mature enough as a profession­al sport to go there just yet.

World Rugby’s elected officials still hold onto the amateur notion that the suits run the game; the players, like cattle, are dispensabl­e; and, the referee is untouchabl­e.

It may have been like that in the amateur era, but in a sport where billions of dollars govern the fortunes of teams and ensure the hosting of global tournament­s, the most important aspect of the game has to be eradicatin­g wrong decisions.

United?

Antonio Conte

Conte is a serial winner, given that he has previously won titles in Italy and in England with Chelsea. His most recent success was guiding Inter Milan to the Serie A title for the first time in 11 years, before sensationa­lly quitting following intensive cost-cutting measures by the Italian club, which were exacerbate­d by the pandemic.

Conte has the tactical mind to bring success to United. On the other hand, he does have a reputation for not being the easiest of people to work with and for walking away when things get tough, as happened at Inter.

If Conte is to get the United job, he will have to learn to better manage troubling and controvers­ial situations. Erik Ten Hag

Ten Hag has cultivated a positive reputation due to the work that he has done at Ajax Amsterdam. A serial Eredivisie winner, Ten Hag famously was on the verge of leading the Dutch giants to the 2019 Champions League final before late brilliance from Lucas Moura put paid to that.

Ten Hag has a good reputation for working with youth and many brilliant young players are drawn to the prospect of working with him. On the other hand, he simply does not have the star-power of Conte and Zidane. Brendan Rodgers

The current Leicester City boss is one of the best tactical minds in England. He is certainly more mature than he was when he previously almost won the Premier League title with Liverpool in 2014.

Rodgers has transforme­d Leicester into a solid top six Premier League team in addition to leading them to the FA Cup last season.

Leicester will not part ways easily with him given that he is under contract and United are a rival team. It would be far easier for United to recruit Conte or Zidane.

Cricket’s referral system, for so long rejected by the powerhouse elected officials of the game, has cleansed the sport of so much suspicion because it has gone a long way to removing human error, the temptation of outside influence and the wrong decision being made for personal or cartel gain.

I have no doubt Erasmus knew that the content of his video was explosive and that it would make its way into the public domain and that it would ensure focus on the match officials for the second and third Tests.

It had the desired effect and the second and third Test match officiatin­g was among the most accurate I have ever seen. When in doubt, the referee went upstairs. There were equal eyes given to both teams and considerat­ion given to anything that could be viewed as contentiou­s and have an influence on the outcome.

The complaints from traditiona­lists was that a 40 minute first half took 62 minutes. It did, but in those 62 minutes the decision-making was accurate and without bias because the checks were put in place to remove human error.

World Rugby’s elected ‘Old Boys Club’ went on the attack against Erasmus and they have targeted him with a disciplina­ry because he spoke out.

They have no desire to actually address the issue, which was that the referee got 23 instances wrong of the 26 Erasmus highlighte­d, and he did this in a Test match in which the ball was in play for 35 minutes. It means that he was getting it wrong every 90 seconds.

Berry was rewarded with further Test match duties in the Rugby Championsh­ips and hailed as one of the brighter young referees in the game. There have been no consequenc­es for Berry.

The man in the dock this weekend is Erasmus, when the one who should have been charged with bringing the game into disrepute was Berry and his fellow match officials.

Erasmus won’t win his hearing because the "Old Boys Club" won’t concede to such public humiliatio­n, but he won’t lose anything but his time for having to privately embarrass World Rugby.

Erasmus asked for the two-day hearing to be made live and open to the public, in the name of transparen­cy.

World Rugby refused.

Enough said.

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 ?? ?? RASSIE Erasmus, director of rugby during the second test of the British and Irish Lions Rugby Tour against the Boks at Cape Town Stadium on July 31. | GAVIN BARKER Backpagepi­x
RASSIE Erasmus, director of rugby during the second test of the British and Irish Lions Rugby Tour against the Boks at Cape Town Stadium on July 31. | GAVIN BARKER Backpagepi­x
 ?? ?? FORMER Real Madrid manager Zinedine Zidane | Backpagepi­x
FORMER Real Madrid manager Zinedine Zidane | Backpagepi­x

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